Australia The
Labor Party and the
Liberal–National Coalition both support the 1996
National Firearms Agreement, 2024
legislation to ban children under 16 from social media, and opposition to the
death penalty.
Canada At the federal level, Canada has been dominated by two big tent parties practicing "brokerage politics". Both the
Liberal Party of Canada and the
Conservative Party of Canada (or its predecessors) have attracted support from a broad spectrum of voters. Although parties such as the
Communist Party of Canada, the Quebec nationalist
Bloc Quebecois, and others, have elected members to the
House of Commons,
far-right and
far-left parties have never gained a prominent force in Canadian society and have never formed a government in the Canadian Parliament. with very similar and
centre-right political positioning and a
liberal conservative ideology. The reason they remain separate is due mainly to historical factors, with those who supported the
Anglo-Irish Treaty in the 1920s eventually becoming Fine Gael, and those opposed would join Fianna Fáil and seek an independent Ireland. In many areas such as openness to
Foreign Direct Investment and a stated willingness to incorporate
Northern Ireland the broad policies of the two parties were very similar.
United States James Madison argued in
The Federalist Papers that a danger to democracies were factions, which he defined as a group that pushed its interests to the detriment of the national interest. While the
framers of the Constitution did not think that political parties would play a role in
American politics, political parties have long been a major force in American politics, and the nation has alternated between periods of intense party rivalry and partisanship, as well as periods of bipartisanship. There have been periods of bipartisanship in American politics, such as when
Democrats worked with
Republican President
Ronald Reagan in the 1980s, with foreign policy was being seen as an area where bipartisanship was strongest with President
William Howard Taft, stating that fundamental foreign policies should be above party differences. Military policies of the
Cold War and actions like the
Iraq War were promoted and supported, through the
mass media, as bipartisan acts. A more partisan tone tended to be taken on domestic policy and this could be sharper at some times such as
Barack Obama's presidency with minority parties voting as a bloc against major legislation. A call for bipartisanship is often made by presidents who "can't get their way in Congress". ==Criticism==